| > Keep in mind that Germany imports energy. Germany imports energy. It also imports electricity sometimes. But Germany actually has a large export surplus for electricity over the last five years - even though several nuclear power plants have been closed. And the surplus is widening. > So phasing out nuclear power, while still importing from nations running nuclear is somewhat hypocritical (e.g. France has some plants along the border). Germany has now the largest electricity export surplus in Europe. Germany also has a large electricity export surplus with France. The German export surplus of electricity in 2017 was 60TWH. 2016 56 TWH, 2015 57TWH. Etc. https://www.energy-charts.de/energy.htm?source=import-export... In money this means an export surplus in 2017 of 1.4 Billion Euro. Renewable energy is now at 36% for electricity and Germany now for the first time has days where the whole country is powered by renewable electricity. > e.g. France has some plants along the border The old french nuclear power plants Germany would like to see closed. > I wonder where the energy for electric cars will come from if they truly become popular. Depends where you are, but I live in North Germany and it's possible to have large amount of surplus electricity in one or two decades from wind with buffers (like hydro in Norway which is then transported via HVDC lines to Germany). |
Great, but my point still stands. Would I like more renewables? Of course! Would I prefer running the nuclear powerplants we already have instead of coal? Yes.
The surplus is great, but just illustrates the issue with renewables. I just wish we could be a bit more truthful about the surplus. Large numbers are nice, but that’s manager level detail. A surplus when you don’t need it and have no way of storing it is useless, and you end up paying people to use electrisity, which has happened. And that’s with only 36% renewable energy. This problem will get worse, not better.
I guess electric cars will be able to store some of that by charging during the day and overnight. But we’re still far away from 100% renewable without electric cars, and just because we’re not burning petrol or diesel doesn’t make electric cars environmentally friendly.